Article written against the spirit of Franco-American friendship
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02/20/2003 - French-bashing is on the rise as U.S. faces off over Iraq

CNN, Thursday, February 20, 2003 Posted: 5:58 PM EST (2258 GMT)

PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Mon dieu, how some Americans are bashing the French these days!

Americans galled by France's reluctance to endorse an invasion of Iraq are boycotting French wine and french fries and trading jokes and insults about all things Gallic.

A Las Vegas radio station Tuesday used an armored vehicle to crush photographs of French President Jacques Chirac, photocopies of the French flag, a Paris travel guide, bottles of wine and a loaf of French bread.

In Beaufort, North Carolina, one restaurant owner took french fries off his menu and replaced them with "freedom fries."

In West Palm Beach, Florida, bar owner Ken Wagner dumped his entire stock of French wine and champagne into the street, vowing to serve vintages only from nations that support U.S. policy.

And Palm Beach County Commissioner Burt Aaronson said he would try to block a subsidiary of the French conglomerate Vivendi from getting a $25 million government contract to build a sludge treatment plant.

FACT BOX
A Gallup poll found a nearly 20-point drop in the percentage of Americans who think favorably of France.

"France's attitude toward the United States is deplorable. I don't want to have any French companies earning dollars from American interests," the 75-year-old Aaronson said. "We've left thousands of our men and women over in France, underground. It's quite possible that if we didn't send our troops there, the French people would all be speaking German."

France is far from alone in pushing for a delay in military action. Germany, Belgium, Sweden, Finland, Austria, Greece, Ireland and Luxembourg have all said they would prefer to give U.N. weapons inspections more time.

But it is the French who have borne the brunt of U.S. scorn and become the butt of jokes about their beret-wearing, wine-drinking, cheese-eating, Jerry Lewis-loving, literature-deconstructing, surrendering-to-the-Germans ways.

"France wants more evidence," David Letterman wisecracked. "The last time France wanted more evidence, it rolled right through France with a German flag."

Comedian Dennis Miller quipped: "The only way the French are going in is if we tell them we found truffles in Iraq."

Rep. Roy Blunt, R-Missouri, warmed up a crowd of GOP leaders in Missouri last week by saying, "Do you know how many Frenchmen it takes to defend Paris? It's not known, it's never been tried."

And this: "Somebody was telling me about the French Army rifle that was being advertised on eBay the other day -- the description was, `Never shot. Dropped once."'

And this, too: "Going to war without the French is like going deer hunting without your accordion."

The New York Post branded France and Germany "the axis of weasel," then ran a doctored page-one photo that put giant weasel heads on the shoulders of the French and German ambassadors to the United Nations.

Natalie Loiseau, spokeswoman for the French Embassy in Washington, said the barbs go beyond the dispute over Iraq.

"There is kind of a tradition of French-bashing here," she said Wednesday. "There is a kind of rivalry. It has lasted for years, and for centuries, really."

Mark Twain joked in an 1879 journal, "There is nothing lower than the human race except the French."

It's not something the French take too seriously.

Even this week, Loiseau said the embassy had not received any complaints from French citizens living in the United States about harassment.

For their part, the French have long lambasted American cultural influence in Europe, decrying American fast food and pushy American tourists.

"There is also a tradition of American-bashing in France, yes," Loiseau said. "If you read the press on either side of the Atlantic, you would think we were ready to go to war with each other. Obviously, that is not the case. We are still good friends."

A Gallup poll in early February found a nearly 20-point drop in the percentage of Americans who think favorably of France. About 59 percent of Americans view France favorably, while 33 percent have an unfavorable view.

Germany, America's enemy in two world wars, does not seem to have produced the same level of disdain. Some 71 percent of Americans thought favorably of Germany, while 21 percent viewed it unfavorably.

"It's a little different," said Pennsylvania state Rep. Stephen Barrar, who has asked the state to bar sales of French wine. "For 60 years, America has protected France. And we're tired of their anti-American attitude."